About Us

Despite all common appearances, we are anything but your typical swamp tour. Our mission is focused on educating people on the importance and impact of the Louisiana wetlands, and the devastation that’s caused by the everyday dredging and mining taking place on the Louisiana coast.

After taking our tours, you’ll see why the wetlands are worth fighting for, and why their loss will be destructive to the residents of Southeast Louisiana, the safety of New Orleans, and the economy nationwide.

You’ll start in New Orleans with an in-depth audio-visual education on the history of this problem and the proposed cures from our staff of award-winning experts.

Then come with us for a first-hand experience into the beauty and peril of the largest wetlands ecosystems left in the lower 48 states.

But you’ll also see the damage caused by the nation’s neglect and poor stewardship. You’ll visit sites where unwise development has left behind dying deltas — graveyards not only for fish and wildlife but entire communities that have been replaced by open water.

Visitors who have taken the journey with us say it’s an experience they will never forget.

That’s what Lost Lands Tours is all about.

Louisiana Lost Lands Environmental Tours is an L3C. An L3C is a low-profit limited liability company required by law to “significantly further the accomplishment of one or more charitable or educational purposes.”

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As seen in …

Press Mentions

Lost Lands Lie at the City’s Door (Via Nola Vie)

It’s out there, lapping at our feet, a hand’s-breath away. Magnificent and perhaps doomed, a siren calling with a melody that most of us fail to hear.

Louisiana’s still-massive cypress and tupelo forests, meandering bayous and sprawling wetlands, which once laced the city itself, are dwindling at an alarming rate. This integral part of the local landscape sits literally at our doorstep, yet remains lamentably off the radar for many whose lives and futures depend on it.

Maybe Bob Marshall’s Lost Land Tours Can Help Us Rebuild Louisiana’s Coast (WGNO)

Bob Marshall has been an outdoors writer for The Times-Picayune for decades. He knows Louisiana’s coast and waterways better than just about anyone. It was great news to hear Marshall and his wife, Marie, started a company called “Lost Land Tours.” It’s a tour company and so much more.

Take This Tour to Uncover The Hidden Secrets of Louisiana’s Wetlands (Only In Your State)

What’s the best way to kick off 2017 in Louisiana? How about a dynamic wetlands tour to uncover the amazing and vibrant ecosystems of Louisiana swamps? This unique tour company is dedicated to showcasing the beauty of Louisiana’s wetlands while educating visitors at the same time -– it’s awesome!

Louisiana Lost Lands Environmental Tours (Country Roads Magazine)

We had come today for the experience, to immerse ourselves in the simple beauty of this magical scenery. What we found was an education into an environment stripped to its core and left shattered by the man-made levees, canals and pipelines bisecting its integrity. It’s an uphill battle; yet Lost Lands is up for the challenge, fighting to win one kayaker at a time.

Watching wildlife…in New Orleans (New Orleans & Me)

Finally, we want to give a shout out to Louisiana Lost Lands Tours. These guys eschew the usual airboat and Ragin’ Cajun clichés for an intimate kayak trek into the local marshscape. Motorboat tours are offered as well, but we cannot recommend the paddling adventures highly enough; you will not only see local flora and fauna, but come to appreciate it at a face to face, heart deep level.

Other Online Mentions

Educational Kayak Tour of Louisiana’s Wetlands (National Geographic)

Louisiana Lost Lands Environmental Tours has a mission focused on educating our customer on the importance and impact of the Louisiana Wetlands, and the devastation that’s caused by the everyday dredging and mining taking place on the Louisiana Coast.

Losing Louisiana? (Garden & Gun Magazine)

Sometime around the mid-sixties, people who’d thrived for generations by catching, selling, and eating wildlife along the Louisiana coast started noticing that water formerly wrist deep was up to their elbows. A sea change, so to speak, was under way. The only thing I can say for it is, it led us to our cat, Jimmy.

University of New Orleans Nonfiction Writers Reflect on a Day Spent on a Louisiana Bayou (Down on the Bayou)

Nine writers from Richard Goodman’s University of New Orleans MFA program kayaked Shell Bank Bayou in SE Louisiana to Lake Maurepas. Often, the tangled vegetation made it hard going. But they all made it to the lake — and back — in good spirits and undaunted. Here are their reflections.

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AN L3C CORPORATION

Louisiana Lost Lands Environmental Tours is an L3C. An L3C is a low-profit limited liability corporation required by law to “significantly further the accomplishment of one or more charitable or educational purposes.” Read our Disclaimer and Privacy Policy.

MADE POSSIBLE BY PROPELLER

A New Orleans-based company, Lost Lands got its start with a Propeller Fellowship in 2012. Propeller is a nonprofit that helps launch socially- and environmentally-conscious business and nonprofits in New Orleans. Learn more by clicking here.